Winter driving

Road_walker

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Joined
Oct 10, 2025
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5
Yeah, last winter taught me a lesson about how nasty snow and ice can be. After sliding around way too much on a back road, I started keeping chains, a shovel, extra clothes, and a little emergency kit in my car. It really made me feel better prepared. What do you guys do to get ready for driving in the winter?
 
If i know bad weather is coming or the roads are already bad, I’ll keep a couple bags of rock salt in the bed of the teuck. The weight helps traction on the back tires, and if i get stuck I can use the salt for traction just like sand and the obvious melting of snow if needed for traction.
 
Beyond the physical preparations, mental preparation is highly important.

I grew up in the Utica/Rome of NY. My commute to college was 26 miles, most of the trip along a 4 lane divided highway. The first snow storm of the year dropped 8" snow, and on the way to school I counted 26 cars in the ditch. Folks didn't slow down and/or maintain a longer separation between vehicles. They probably knew how to drive on snow, but weren't yet remembering how.

The following week there was another storm, and about half that number of cars were in the ditch. The "snow reflexes" were returning.

The week after that, after another storm, there were 3 cars in the ditch along my route. For most people the snow reflexes were in full force. For the few? As Ron White says, "you can't fix stupid." 🤣

Having lived in NC for 30+ years, when it snows or ices, I do my best to stay home. That way there's one less idiot on the road. If I have to go out, I have a shovel and extra jacket. The Raleigh area doesn't get much snow, so this works out. If I lived in the mountains, I'd keep sand or kitty litter in the trunk.
 
In the NE corner, it rarely snows. But we've had two already this year. Strange. My 4wheel drive F-150 seems to go most anywhere I've ever wanted to go and I keep extra cloths and survival gear in it year-round. So the answer is, I don't do anything different.
 
It rarely snows where I live near the coast. My car is winterized and I have emergency stuff in the trunk, but I avoid driving when there is a heavy snowfall.
There are just too many folks with bald tires driving like to roadway is dry for me to risk joining them. I have enough food stuff to last over a week, and I've never had to wait that long for the roads to clear.
 
Winter taught me to be ready for anything. I keep chains, a shovel, warm clothes, and a basic emergency kit in my truck. Cold weather isn't so bad when you're prepared.
 

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